South Carolina Immigration Laws
South Carolina was an early adopter of aggressive immigration enforcement. The SC Illegal Immigration Reform Act (2008, amended 2011) mandates E-Verify for ALL private employers — one of the broadest mandates in the nation. South Carolina prohibits sanctuary policies, bans undocumented students from enrolling in public colleges, and has expanded 287(g) agreements from 3 to 15 as of May 2025.
Last verified: 2026-02-25
Key South Carolina Statutes
All private employers must use E-Verify to verify every new employee within 3 business days of hire. Mandatory for all employers since January 1, 2012. Penalties: 1st violation — 1-year probation with quarterly compliance reports. Knowingly employing unauthorized workers: license suspension (10-60 days), escalating to revocation.
South Carolina has no sanctuary cities and actively prohibits sanctuary policies. Pending legislation would withhold Local Government Fund disbursements from non-compliant jurisdictions. 287(g) agreements expanded from 3 to 15 as of May 2025.
Undocumented immigrants are prohibited from enrolling in public higher education. DACA recipients may enroll but cannot access in-state tuition or state financial aid. South Carolina is classified as a "Prohibitive" state for undocumented student access.
Official Sources
Not Legal Advice
This page summarizes publicly available statutes and rules for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by viewing this content. Laws change — always verify with the primary source or consult a licensed attorney in South Carolina.
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